AltWeeklies Wire

Campo: 'Campo'new

Although it’s billed as his solo debut, Uruguayan producer Juan Campodónico is far from alone on Campo, the latest chapter in the cinematic world of Bajofondo...
San Antonio Current  |  Bryan Rindfuss  |  05-28-2012  |  Reviews

Paul & Linda McCartney: 'RAM'new

More Pet Sounds than Sgt. Pepper's, RAM was unjustly panned by critics upon its original release in 1971.
San Antonio Current  |  Enrique Lopetegui  |  05-28-2012  |  Reviews

CD Review: Dandy Warhols' This Machinenew

The End; Release date: April 24, 2012
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Lew Herman  |  05-24-2012  |  Reviews

Jane's Addiction's greatest Escapenew

'90s alt-rockers fueled by latest album
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Jeff Hahne  |  05-24-2012  |  Reviews

Garbage: 'Not Your Kind of People'new

The opening chords of the latest album from Shirley Manson and Co. — released on the band’s own label — sound like the most epic Megaman game ever to hit your Nintendo.
San Antonio Current  |  James Bosquez  |  05-24-2012  |  Reviews

Pep Squad: 'Get Outrageous'new

Overdosed on retro-futurism? Pep Squad is not for you.
San Antonio Current  |  Adam Villela Coronado  |  05-17-2012  |  Reviews

The Texas Weather: 'The Fall, The Winter'new

Nick Mery may have a rep for being his own biggest fan, but The Fall, The Winter (the album title was changed from the original Pluck) demonstrates his willingness to let someone else take the reins.
San Antonio Current  |  Adam Villela Coronado  |  05-17-2012  |  Reviews

Willie Nelson: 'Heroes'new

Unlike too many artists his age, Willie Nelson (who turned 79 in April) gets cooler and edgier with time. His latest album is a collection of country classics from as early as the 1930s and new songs that are as good — if not even better — than the covers.
San Antonio Current  |  Enrique Lopetegui  |  05-17-2012  |  Reviews

Great Lake Swimmers: New Wild Everywherenew

Toronto songwriter Tony Dekker leads Great Lake Swimmers, an electrified folk orchestra striving for the same agelessness that's carried decades of roots music. New Wild Everywhere finds Dekker writing with a troubadour's restlessness, filling his songs with elemental and natural imagery—fire, wind, storms, animals, wounds, dreams and desires...
Tucson Weekly  |  Eric Swedlund  |  05-17-2012  |  Reviews

Santana: 'Shape Shifter'new

Santana’s first release on his newly formed Starfaith label is a mostly instrumental tour-de-force that pays homage to the indigenous peoples of America while advocating for international recognition of the egregious wrongs done to native peoples worldwide.
San Antonio Current  |  Enrique Lopetegui  |  05-17-2012  |  Reviews

Godhunter: Wolvesnew

Local sludge quintet Godhunter finally unveils a proper physical-CD release for their debut five-track album, which became available via the band's Bandcamp site earlier this year. Recorded at Arcane Digital Recording in Chandler and released by Tucson extreme-music label Acid Reflux, Wolves wields a medulla oblongata-wrenching wallop and obvious political (anarcho-libertarian) lyrics...
Tucson Weekly  |  Jarret Keene  |  05-16-2012  |  Reviews

Mex Step and MNOLO: 'Machine People'new

Machine People marks the first of at least two 2012 releases from Mexican Stepgrandfather (here credited as Mex Step, Marco Cervantes in real life).
San Antonio Current  |  Adam Villela Coronado  |  05-11-2012  |  Reviews

Karloz: 'Tex-Bop Deluxe'new

Who the hell is "Karloz"? This is the type of album that sits for weeks and weeks on a music critic's desk as the writer works to shake their fears of yet another cheesy collection of crowd-pleasing old hits given the "Tejano" treatment.
San Antonio Current  |  Enrique Lopetegui  |  05-11-2012  |  Reviews

High on Fire: De Vermis Mysteriisnew

To call High on Fire's sound "punishing" would not be hyperbole. While it may seem unrelenting and repetitive at first, it's a pain that becomes addictive after multiple rotations.
Tucson Weekly  |  Brian Mock  |  05-11-2012  |  Reviews

Kat Edmonson: 'Way Down Low'new

Everything you need to know about Kat Edmonson is encapsulated on track four of Way Down Low: a reading of the Beach Boys' “I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times.”
San Antonio Current  |  James Courtney  |  05-10-2012  |  Reviews

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